Pubdate: Sat, 04 May 2002 Source: Reuters (Wire) Copyright: 2002 Reuters Limited THOUSANDS MARCH IN BRITAIN FOR LEGAL CANNABIS Thousands of pro-cannabis demonstrators held peaceful marches in Britain's largest cities on Saturday before letting their hair down at a series of outdoor parties, picnics and festivals. The marches in London, Manchester and Birmingham to push for the legalisation of cannabis were part of almost 200 similar events planned around the world this weekend under the name of the "Million Marijuana March." "The march is to protest for legalisation and the festival is a celebration of cannabis," said Shane Collins, licensee for the Cannabis Carnival in Brixton, south London. Collins estimated the British cannabis trade to be worth six billion pounds a year, adding it provided thousands of Britons with jobs. "We want to put the profits from that into where they are needed -- youth services and residential rehab," he told the BBC. A police spokeswoman said they did not have a estimate of crowd numbers but said the marches were trouble free and the crowds had dispersed by early evening. The marches came as the government contemplated downgrading cannabis to class C, the least serious drug category, and as police around the country review their approach to the drug. The "softly, softly" approach to cannabis was this week endorsed by Britain's Association of Chief Police Officers. The London march ended up in the suburb of Brixton, which is the scene of a police experiment on cautioning rather than arresting cannabis smokers, an approach pioneered by controversial police chief Brian Paddick. Paddick -- Britain's highest ranking openly gay officer -- is being investigated by the Police Complaints Authority over allegations he regularly smoked cannabis with former lover James Renolleau. A poll last month for Britain's Observer newspaper said 51 percent of the nation's 16- to 24-year-olds had taken banned drugs, while five million people regularly use cannabis. Before the march, Collins said the protest was not aimed at promoting the drug to teenagers. "We don't want more youths smoking it," he said. "It's good for writing, but it's not conducive to studying. And anyway, smoking too much of it can turn you into a very boring person." - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake